Well I need the excerpt to answer the question : )
Could you clip it?
Answer:
Student: Sir, should we make a statistical assessment of the results of the project?
CS teacher: I believe so, but I would like to see the results first and read the summary of your project, to indicate the best evaluation.
Student: If it is not necessary, I believe that we can finalize the project. Perhaps we can present it at the university's next science and technology symposium.
CS teacher: Send me what you've done so far, so I can evaluate it better. In addition, I need you to review the delivery dates for articles from the university magazine, to see if we can publish an article for this project.
Student: I'll see that right now.
CS teacher: Thank you.
Explanation:
The dialogue above was made between a student and a CS teacher about the completion of a project. This dialogue involves the evaluation of results and the publication of possible articles, in addition to the presentation of the same.
The dialogue was done in a fast, direct and clear language, as it should be between students and teachers busy with projects and dates and other bureaucracies in the academic environment.
<span>The opening sentence of the novel notifies readers that Huck Finn is the narrator and will tell his story in his own words, in his own language and dialect (complete with grammatical errors and misspellings), and from his own point of view. By using the first person narrative point of view, Twain carries on the southwestern humor tradition of vernacular language; that is, Huck sounds as a young, uneducated boy from Missouri should sound.
This first sentence also alludes to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. The allusion reminds the reader of a novel about boys and their adventures, the purpose of which, according to Twain, was to rekindle in adults memories “of how they felt and thought and talked, and what queer enterprises they sometimes engaged in.” Then Huck—and Twain—dismiss the work with “But that ain’t no matter.” Although the boyish type adventure episodes tend to reappear as a plot motif in Huck Finn, especially in the sections including Tom, their primary purpose is more to communicate criticism of Twain’s contemporary society than to evoke fond memories. This statement also makes clear that it does not matter whether readers have read Twain’s earlier book or not. Huck Finn is Huck’s story, and he will tell it from his natural, unsophisticated perspective. </span>
It means she is frightened
I think the central idea is The people